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COVER STORY |
Will The raging internal
conflict could throw Nepal off the progress track making it difficult, if not impossible,
to attain the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) hammered out at the international
conferences and adopted by the world leaders during the United Nations Millennium
Declaration in September 2000. The eight MDGs are actually the development targets related
to the bread and butter issues of the people that have to be met within 2015. Even as the
government seems confident to attain at least four of the goals, the escalation in
conflict could derail the process. As these goals reflect the basic fundamentals of human
development, the success of their achievement is in everybodys interest. But how
successful Nepal will be in attaining the targets like halving the poverty; achieving
universal education; reducing child mortality by two-thirds; reducing by half the number
of people without access to safe drinking water; ending gender disparities; reducing
maternal mortality by three-quarters; halting the spread of HIV/AIDS and other diseases
remain to be seen By SANJAYA DHAKAL
For Harka Tamang of Kavre, talking
about development targets when he is unable to even live in peace in his village seems
like a tall order. Like Tamang, thousands of Nepalese living in grinding poverty and
without basic services, are toiling hard in their country and abroad to make their ends
meet. And at the end of the day, they are haunted by the violent conflict that is
extracting the ever-increasing human cost from one of the poorest corners of the world. Even as the escalating conflict is
having negative impact on every spheres of development, the country cannot afford to slide
back or even remain standstill. Dreams of millions of Nepalese like Tamang can only be
fulfilled if the country sticks to the path of development. The world leaders had agreed to free the
humankind from the shackles of poverty and misery by adopting the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) at the dawn of the 21st century. In their goals, the leaders have included
the most basic of human needs, in the absence of which the teeming billions are living
inhuman lives across the globe, and particularly in the third world developing countries
like Nepal. The MDGs provide a glimmer of hope to
people like Tamang who work as wage-laborers day in and day out but are hardly able
to sustain their basic daily needs. MDGs And Targets
If things go unchanged, Nepal would
be able to attain only four out of the eight MDGs within the prescribed time of 2015. Dr. Shankar Sharma, the vice chairman of
the National Planning Commission (NPC) the apex planning body of the country
has said that Nepal would be able to attain the goals like halving poverty and hunger;
achieving universal primary education; reducing by two-thirds the child mortality; and
reducing by half the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking
water. The current data, reports and our
calculations show that we would be able to attain these goals and that, too, if the
situation of conflict does not go out of control, said Dr. Sharma who is in the lead
in formulating and implementing development strategies of the country. Other MDGs including eliminating gender
disparity in primary and secondary education; reducing by three quarters the maternal
mortality ratio; halting and reversing the spread of HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases;
as well as the goal of developing an integrated global partnership for development do not
look likely to be achieved. International development partners, too,
are skeptical about Nepals ability to attain the MDGs particularly due to the
raging internal conflict. To achieve the Goal number one, Nepal needs
to bring down the level of poverty (with income of less than US$ 1 a day) to less than 21
percent of the total population from the 42 percent in 1990. We are well on
our way to achieve that. The mid-term review of 2000 showed the poverty level had come
down to 38 percent. The forthcoming Nepal Living Standard Survey will show a significant
drop in that level, said Dr. Sharma without elaborating how significant the drop
would be. The survey report is expected to be made public within a month or two. The
survey, conducted by the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), has taken the expertise and
help of the World Bank to record the drop in poverty level. Sources said that there could
be a significant drop this time as low as around 30 percent. Officials have said that the poverty level
is decreasing in the country not only because of international intervention but also
because of increasing remittances by Nepalese working overseas. In the last seven years,
the remittance has increased, on annual average, by 30 percent. More importantly, these
remittances have penetrated rural areas where most of the overseas workers live. At
present, around US$ 1 billion is received every year by the country in form of
remittances. Moreover the agriculture has been growing impressively at around 3.6
percent, said Dr. Sharma.
Likewise, the government is also
upbeat that it can attain the target of achieving universal primary education. At present,
82 percent of the children (between the age 6 to 10 years) go to school and only 67
percent of them complete their primary education. The government has started implementing
the Education For All by 2015 project since this year. Reduction of child mortality by two-thirds
is another goal that Nepal believes it can attain. There has been a considerable
reduction in under-5 mortality within the last three decades. From the very high rate of
more than 200 per thousand live births in 1972 (and 161.6 in 1990), child mortality was
reduced to 91 in 2000. This substantial reduction was, to a large extent, made possible
through the control of malaria, smallpox, cholera and other highly communicable
diseases, states the Nepal governments Progress Report on MDGs published in
2002. Nepal needs to bring down the child mortality to 54 by 2015 to attain the MDG. The
periodic Immunization drives have also supported the campaign. The goal of halving the proportion of
people without sustainable access to safe drinking water is also on track of being met. In
1996, there were 61 percent people who had access to safe drinking water, which increased
to 72 percent in 2001. It has to touch 80 percent mark by 2015. The government of Nepal has formulated its
Tenth Plan, Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) and other related development
priorities by closely integrating it with the MDGs. The overriding objective of the
ongoing Tenth Plan is also the poverty alleviation. Critical Goals
However, other goals that are not
likely to be achieved, too, are critical to Nepal. For example, the prevailing gender
disparity in education is halting the countrys progress in every front. At present,
percentage of girls to boys in primary education (gross enrolment) is 78 (compared to 56
in 1990); in secondary education (grade 6-10) it is 71; and in higher secondary (grade
11-12) it is 65. Given the trend, it is likely that the girls to boys gross
enrolment ratio will reach somewhere close to the 90 percent mark (by 2015), states
the Progress Report. Attempting to achieve the MDGs
without promoting gender equality will both raise the costs and decrease the likelihood of
achieving the other goals, said Bandana Rana, president of Sancharika Samuha, a
leading women rights promoting organization. Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR) in Nepal is
one of the highest in the world at 539 per 100,000 live births. The goal of bringing this
down to 213 by 2015 is going to be an uphill task, concede officials. Most of these deaths
can be prevented if they are provided timely health care facilities and proper care. But
the average population per physician in Nepal is 23,038. These doctors are mostly
stationed in cities. For example, in Achham one of the remote districts in
mid-western region, only two male doctors are there for a population of about 200,000,
more than 50 percent of which are women. Thus, the inadequacy of services and health
infrastructures for rural population remain the biggest challenge for improving maternal
health by 2015, said Rana. Furthermore, the goal of halting and
reversing the spread of HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases is also least likely to be
attained. In fact, the Progress Report states that the HIV prevalence rate among adults
(15-49 years old) in Nepal would increase from 0.29 percent of total population in 2000 to
2 percent in 2015. The malaria spread, too, seems to be refusing to stop. In 2000, there
were 29 incidents of malaria infection per 100,000 people. The eighth goal related to global
development integration is largely for developed countries. The current trend shows that the
possibilities of attaining the MDGs are fifty-fifty. And this is true not only for Nepal
but the whole of South Asia, said noted economist Dr. Bishwambher Pyakuryal,
president of Nepal Economic Association. Dr. Pyakuryal, who is also a member of the
Independent South Asian Commission on Poverty Alleviation (ISACPA) formed by the 2004
Islamabad Summit of South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), said that
the heads of the governments of the South Asian region concerned with the tardy progress
in the attainment of MDGs have formed the commission to come up with the strategies to
achieve the development targets. It has been seen here that although
we succeeded to achieve economic growths, we could not create assets for the poor,
said Dr. Pyakuryal. The MDGs are about sending our
children to school, about the 24 million population of Nepal getting enough to eat, being
able to avoid or cure diseases as malaria, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS, taking more care of
mothers and children, especially regarding safe delivery of babies and immunizations, and
realizing the need of greater environment for breathing fresh air and remaining
healthy, Matthew Kahane, Resident Representative of the UNDP/Nepal, said at a recent
program. The MDGs cannot be achieved by working just from the top down or from the
ground up. They require creative, coordinated and disciplined work from all
directions, he said. The MDGs summarize the development goals
agreed on at international conferences and world summits during the 1990s. At the end of
the decade, world leaders distilled the key goals and targets in the Millennium
Declaration on September 2000. There are eight major goals and 18 time-bound numerical
targets to be achieved over a 25-year period (1990-2015). Nepal is in the initial phase of
implementation of MDG. It was one of the first countries that produced national progress
report on MDGs. So the government seems to be working in line with the MDG report. The
challenge lies on the implementation of the policies and targets, Erna Witoelar, the
UN Special Ambassador for the MDGs in Asia and the Pacific had said when she visited Nepal
in March this year. As Nepal is currently embroiled in the
bitter internal conflict, it faces even more challenge in attaining the MDGs. We are
preparing our second Progress Report on MDG, which will come out in 2005. That will give
us clearer indication of where we stand and how likely we are to achieve the goals,
said Dr. Sharma. Likewise, the government with the support
of UNDP is also engaged in need assessment exercise to identify the interventions that
will be required and financial resources that will be needed to attain the targets. Nepal needs to come up with clear
roadmap regarding the MDGs. It needs to be clear how much additional financing it will
require every year to move on the path towards the attainment of the goals by 2015 and how
much of it will have to come through domestic sources and how much through external
assistance. The need-assessment aims to set these things clear, as well, said Sriram
Raj Pande, the assistant Resident Representative of the United Nations Development Program
(UNDP)/Nepal. The need-assessment will be completed by November this year, officials said.
Impact Of Conflict
The conflict situation is
complicating the things, said Pande. Nobody disagrees with Pandes assessment
but everybody agrees that the conflict further underscores the urgency to attain these
goals. Since the attainment of the MDGs would be
in the interest of the poor people, it will also help in the conflict management, say
many. Dr. Sharma is confident that the conflict
will not hinder the development targets of Nepal. In issues such as health and
education, the disturbance is minimum. And we believe that since the goals have to be met
by 2015, the internal conflict would have been resolved by then, he said. Since issues like grinding poverty, gender
based discrimination, ethnic discrimination, high unemployment and skewed developed are
connected with the conflict, the attainment of MDGs would help to bring about sustainable
peace in the country and usher in an era of prosperity a long cherished dream of
every Nepalese. And then the smile will return to the faces
of people like Tamang who are desperately yearning for a life that is more than just a
hard day of work that is unable to earn them money enough to fill their empty stomach let
alone send their sons and daughters to good schools without having to fear for their life.
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